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tv   The Early Show  CBS  September 20, 2011 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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restarted last night. >> monika and i will be back in 25 minutes with a live update on traffic and weather. >> visit wusa9.com. [ captions by: caption colorado, llc 800-775-7838 email: comments@captioncolorado.com ] good morning. the end of an era as don't ask, don't tell expires and the military enters a new world where gays can serve openly. we'll hear from the pentagon and one former air force major who is fighting to get his job back. the tax in washington, president obama says the rich need to pay more. he says it's simple math. republicans say that won't make the economy any better. this as a new book on the obama economic team paints a picture of chaos in the west wing. we'll hear from both sides. the deadly listeria outbreak is finally traced back to a farm
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and health officials more problems could be traced to bad cantaloupe shipped to 17 states. and it's out with the old and in with the new as "two and a half men" ends its with charlie sheen and debuts ashton kutcher. we will have all the highlights. kutcher. we will have all the highlights. it's september 20th, 2011. captioning funded by cbs and a very good tuesday morning, everyone. >> if you caught "two and a half men" last night, you caught a lot of laughter. >> yes, yes. if you dvv'ed, we won't spoil too much. it was insult upon injury. >> plus you had john stamos. if you haven't seen it yet, check that out.
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>> and we begin with a historic day for the u.s. military. the controversial don't ask, don't tell policy expired at midnight. david martin has more on this dramatic change in policy. >> reporter: after 18 years of controversy, don't ask, don't tell died at the stroke of midnight. from now on, gays can serve openly in the military and the 13,000 who were discharged under don't ask, don't tell can re-enlist. >> no longer will our country be denied the service of thousands of patriot americans who were forced to leave the military because they happen to be gay. >> reporter: president clinton first tried to repeal the ban on gays but ran to the objections of collin powell. a year ago, president obama had the chairman of the joint chiefs on his side. admiral mcmullen was the decisive voice calling for the rel pea of don't ask, don't
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tell. >> we have in place a pomz which forces young men and women to lie about who they are in order to defend their fellow citizens. >> reporter: there are thousands of gay men and women in uniform. as one of them said, this will be the first day that i can be open and honest about who i am. david martin, cbs news, the pentagon. we want to move to the latest on the budget mess. the congressional super committee in charge of the budget is meeting today. >> and cbs news white house correspondent bill plan is here with us in new york for a special treat. good morning. >> good morning. knight nice to be here. with his approval rating sinking and his xhb in the doldrums, the president has been under pressure to step up his game. he may be listening. his speech yesterday was aggressively populist. he threatened to veto any kidz cuts on medicare unless there
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are tax changes for the wealthy. >> the speaker says we can't have it my way or the highway and then basically says, my way or the highway. that's not smart. it's not right. >> reporter: speaker john boehner fired back, accusing the president of divisiveness. >> i don't believe that class warfare is leadership. and, you know, we could get into this tax the rich, tax the rich, but that is not -- that's not the basis for america. and it's not going to get our economy going again and it's not going to put people back to work. >> reporter: the president is asking congress to cut $3.6 trillion from the deficit over ten years, half of that coming from tax increases on the wealthy, including a new tax on millionaires known as the buffett rule. after billionaire warren buffett who says it's not fair that his tax race is lower than his
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secretary's. >> this is not class warfare. it's math. the money is going to have to come from some place. >> reporter: the president's populist stance on taxes comes as a new book suggests he was ill served by dissension in his economic team during the economic bailout in the early months of his presidency, treasury secretary timothy geithner was asked about the book. >> i haven't read this book, but to borrow a phrase, i live the reality. and the reports i've read about this book bear no resemblance to the reality we live together. no resemblance. >> well, the odds are that there's another person who won't be reading that book or paying any attention, the president. he is here in new york today at the u.n. meeting with other heads of state. of course, the big issue this year at the u.n. is the palestinian bid to get the u.n. to declare them a state, despite the fact that they have no agreement with israel.
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jeff. >> you'll be watching that, bill. thank you very much. >> thanks, bill. our white house officials mentioned in that controversial new book, confidence men" are crying foul, as well. one of them is austin gouldsby. good morning. >> good morning. my pleasure. >> this book paints a lot of dissension within the economic advisory council that president obama initially put together. summers and geithner, continually, according to this book, overlook what the president wants and expects. was there any of that happening when you were there? >> well, not really. i haven't read -- to be fair, the book is just coming out today. i haven't read the book and i don't plan on buying it. but from the reports that i've read that characterize the president as if he weren't in charge, i think that's ridiculous. the time i was in the white house, sure, it's a big
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organization and people got different views and they would present those views before the president, but the president fundamentally was the guy making the decisions and all the times when i saw somers and geithner if the president said here is what i've decide we are going to do, they did it. >> so was the president who decided not to dissolve citigroup in march 2009 after he gave the order to treasury secretary geithner to do so? >> well, i saw that reported, that it was in the book, but i think that is just factually wrong. it wasn't -- the president didn't give the order, go dissolve citigroup and then the treasury say no. if you remember, back at that moment, they were doing the stress tests on the banks, which was the test to determine whether they were -- they had inadequate capital and the stress test something took like eight weeks. nobody was talking about dissolving anyone before the stress test is done.
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you had to have the numbers so that there wouldn't be a run on every other bank as they said, oh, no, if they're going to dissolve banks without even doing the test, where are we? i think they just kind of got the -- the author of this book got the timing mixed up. that wasn't the way that occurred. >> so the president never say dissolve citigroup to the treasury secretary? >> correct, correct. >> i want to take a turn and talk about the economy here. right now, the president has a in proposal on the table. $3.6 trillion in deficit cuts. a lot of it focusing on medicare cuts and medicare and medicaid spending and also these increases in tax rates on the super wealthy americans. is it, in your opinion, a good idea to start raising taxes on anyone when the economy is barely growing and unemployment is 9.1%? >> well, in the -- i looked at the proposal you're talking about, and it looks like none of
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the tax increase were coming right away when the economy was, you know, still trying to re-ignite. the taxes were well in the future, not until 2013 and after that. i think the -- from what i read, the essence of the thing was trying to be balanced, that you would have some spending cuts, you would cut discretionary spending, you would cut defense, you would cut entitlements and you'd raise some revenue because we have had the feature that very high income people's tax rate is the lowest its been in something like 60 years. that was the reasoning. and i do think that a balanced approach is better than a one-sided approach. >> just one last point, austin. the white house, in their estimates, say that unemployment is going to be at 9% by the end of next year. so even if these increases come in 2013, they're going to come at a time when the economy is still in a precarious position. >> well, i think the -- i'm not sure that the general forecasts
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are an unemployment rate as high as you say. but it's clearly going to be too high. but i think the essence is how fast is the economy growing? you either have to decide you think that the long run deficit is too big and try to cut it or you can say, well, we're just going to ignore the deficit for however many years it takes to get the unemployment rate back down. i think in the short run you have to do that. >> we appreciate you being with us, austin gouldsby, thank you. >> thank you. now we bring in douglas holtz-eakin. he's now president of american action forum. good morning to you, professor. >> good morning. >> let's talk about these tuts that are on the table. you have the cuts that are on the table, the 3.6 trillion in
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deficit cutting. what's your name on the ttd president's proposal inspect. >> i think it misses him three ways. first first of all, a lot of the spending reductions are the presumed rolldown of the wars in iraq and afghanistan. that's going to happen, anyway. that's not really a new proposal and he's counting it, anyway. second is on the tax front, the president has been eloquent about the need for tax reform. those words are the right words but the proposals he's put out, the buffett rule, temporary tax breaks, are all things that compliment the tax code and move us away from tax reform. it would be nice to see proposals that mamped his words. the real failing is it doesn't take on the future growth in the entirement programs. social security is running rampant, medicare is entirely deficit financed. we need a social safety net that
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is durable for the future. we can't afford the red ink that those programs are generating. his proposals on medicare are all waste, fraud and abuse and we know that that is not what it takes. at this point in our history, we need the leadership on the big problems and that is the potential for a debt crisis and the entitlement programs. >> i want to come back to what a number of people have been saying and they're calling it class warfare. do you believe this is class warfare? >> i don't know what class warfare is. it's like fairness, it's in the matter of the eye of the beholder. i know to have this economy grow, these proposals don't take us there. there's nothing about the buffett tax that is going to solve the biggest unfairness we face, which is the gap between those who have a job and not who do not. >> douglas holtz-eakin, thank you for being with us. we now more over to betty
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celebrating the circus orange. >> i'm trying this morning. good morning to you. this morning, standard & poors decision to downgrade italy's rating, this morning, italy's leading bankers met at the treasury ministry. italy passed an unpopular austerity budget, but s&p indicated it did not go far enough. s&p sees higher levels of government debt. a new audio message believed to be from mu march ga doammara was broadcast this morning saying the bombing would not last. a powerful bomb rocked turkey this morning.
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there are unconfirmed reports the explosion contain from a mini bus. a deputy prime minister says 15 people were wounded. there was an explosion overnight in an oil rig, this time in oklahoma. several homes were evacuated. a witness says there were several explosions, but no confirmed injuries. a tenth person has died as a result of a crash of a world war ii era plane during a plane race in reno. investigator are examining the crash. one photo shows the p-a 51 lost a piece of its tail that helped stabilize the plane. off to new zealand, a monster catch of the day. it took jeremy almost two hours to reel in a huge blue ffin tun
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on sunday. it weighed 670 pounds, just short of a world record. he could have it sold to a seafood dealer for as much as $8,000, but instead, i had cut still ahead this morning, we are looking at the cantaloupe problems, the death toll is now four and it could go even higher from a listeria outbreak that's been traced to one colorado
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cantaloupe farm. we are going to bring you the latest on the efforts to contain the outbreak. and up next on a much lighter note, sorry, charlie, ashton kutcher steps into the hit sitcom "two and a half men." we're going to check in on last night's premier. you're watching "the early show." digestive balance. probiotics go beyond and fruit & veggie has antioxidant properties. new pronutrients from centrum. help make nutrition possible. when you've lost interest in everything. when you've had one too many days feeling sad or anxious... aches and pains, fatigue. when it becomes hard to ignore that you need help.
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hey, jessica, jerry neumann with a policy question. jerry, how are you doing? fine, i just got a little fender bender. oh, jerry, i'm so sorry.
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i would love to help but remember, you dropped us last month. yeah, you know it's funny. it only took 15 minutes to sign up for that new auto insurance company but it's taken a lot longer to hear back. is your car up a pole again? [ crying ] i miss you, jessica! jerry, are you crying? no, i just, i bit my tongue. [ male announcer ] get to a better state. state farm. now is as good a time as any. i ain't cleaning him up. >> charlie sheen's ashes, all over the floor of his old
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apartment as ashton kutcher debuted last night on "two 1/2 men." the internet billionaire broken hearted who came in, met his new roommate. this is the -- the beginning of the episode, we'll go back and show you exactly how they disposed of charlie sheen. >> also, john cryer can't make the mortgage payments. luckily, ashton comes along, the billionaire to be his roomy .take care of things. >> right. and this is how they said good-bye to charlie just before that. >> i came home from shopping and found him taking a shower with another woman. but i forgave him because i loved him unconditionally. so you can imagine my horror when the very next day he slipped on the metro platform and fell in front of an oncoming train. >> never cross a crazy woman.
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>> i just want you all to know that charlie didn't suffer. his body just exploded like a balloon full of meat. >> that explains it. >> it was a funeral on "two and a half men" last night, but not the world's most somber. >> it was a new beginning on "two and a half men." >> we're get something tweets in this morning. >> the internet is going wild with all of this. >> yes. we have a tweet from chelsea jensen, two and a half men, love me some ashton kutcher. >> those modicons drive the points home, too. >> neal says, i think ashton kutcher brought back my love of two and a half men. >> and a great night last night. a great beginning to the new season. >> right back after this. big! big. big. big, big. big, big.
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we're back on "the early show" on a tuesday morning. lovely view in central park there. good morning, everyone. i'm jeff glor along with erica hill. >> good morning. >> this morning, get ready to say good-bye to this. the old ketchup packets you find virtually everywhere. >> for years, people complain that it's too small, too messy. i've had the problem with that mess packet. heinz has now developed an alternative called the dip and squeeze. you see it right there. coming up, we're going to give it a test to see if it's better
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than the old packet that looks like it can sit upright. that's already -- >> looks like an old running football play. >> there you go. we begin now with the outbreak that has turned deadly. federal health officials confirmed that four people in three states have died from listeria traced to cantaloupe from a colorado farm. >> the source of the outbreak recalled its entire crop last week. it had sent 300,000 cases of cantaloupe to 17 states. >> joining us now is medical correspondent dr. jennifer ashton. good to see you. >> good morning, guys. >> first of all, what is listeria? >> we're talking about a bacteria we normally find in association with deli meats, unpasteurized milk or deli products. it is unusual to be associated with fresh produce in this case. but it is a bacteria. in terms of what symptoms it can
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cause, typically things that are very flu like. they can be easily misinterpret, but you could have fever, stiff neck, muscle aches, a headache, gastrointestinal symptoms. in most people, this is grg to be mild. in certain people, this could be severe, even deadly, particularly pregnant women. this could cause anything from p preterm labor, illness -- >> treatment? >> most cases will be mild. severe cases, you're talking about needing antibiotics, possibly hospitalization. but the best treatment, of course, is prevention. practice safe handling food practices always. use bags that separate your produce from your meats. read the labels. if something says fringe rate after opening and when in doubt throw it out. things should not be kept out for more than two hours. try not to reheat things. if you have to smell it to tell
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whether it's still good, don't eat it. >> it's not typically associated with cantaloupe, listeria, but if we could step out, the number of food borne illnesses every year, put that into perspective. >> one in six americans, that translates to 30 million people, 3,000 of whom will die from food borne related complications. so the disease trackers tcdc will be watching this closely. >> thanks for
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up next, a look at morning's news relationship with mexico. mexican president felipe calderon joins us in studio to say how mexico and the u.s. might be able to help each other, especially when it comes to the jobs. called atrial fibrillation, or afib, that's not caused by a heart valve problem? are you taking warfarin to reduce your risk of stroke caused by a clot? you should know about pradaxa. an important study showed that pradaxa 150mg reduced stroke risk 35% more than warfarin. and with pradaxa, there's no need for those regular blood tests. pradaxa is progress. pradaxa can cause serious, sometimes fatal, bleeding. don't take pradaxa if you have abnormal bleeding, and seek immediate medical care for unexpected signs of bleeding like unusual bruising. pradaxa may increase your bleeding risk if you're 75 or older, have kidney problems or a bleeding condition, like stomach ulcers. or if you take aspirin products, nsaids, or blood thinners.
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it has a few tumultuous year for our neighbor to the south, mexico. at the same time, mexico's economy remains strong and growing. we'll speak to mexico's president in just a moment here, but first, a look at the complicated relationship between our two nations. elected in 2006 by a margin of you just 0.5%, felipe calderon became mexico's president amid controversy and quickly confronted the country's drug lords. calderon was the first president to use the armed forces to fight the drug cartels. >> welcome to the united states.
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>> calderon has found an ally in the obama administration, but he says he wants more cooperation, like renewing the ban of assault weapons which often make their way across the border. securing that border has been a hot political issue, but the number of immigrants coming to america is actually at its lowest level in 40 years. there's been more job creation in mexico and the u.s. and mexican banks were better prepared to weather the global recession. >> mexican banks had a major crisis several decades ago and were straightened out then. our jobs are yet to be straightened out. >> unemployment in mexico is below 6%. an economic recovery below our border that's proven in part beneficial to companies in the u.s. >> more jobs in mexico means more american products are sold there and that's good for the country. >> reporter: calderon's term ends this year. his presidency likely known for overseeing an economic expansion
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will likely be embedded in the drug war. >> good morning, mr. president. >> thank you. good morning. >> i want to start by asking you about some of these comments you made at this dinner last night. you talked about drug consumption in the u.s. and you said if drug consumption can't be limited here, decision-makers must seek more solutions. you're talking about market alternatives. are you talking about legalizing drugs? >> i'm talking about market alternatives, market solutions. the point is the astro nottnomi- that the criminals have coming from the consumption of the united states must be addressed. and my point is either we reduce consumption or we need more alternatives, more solutions to analyze and among them, of course, we need to include the market alternatives the. >> immigration reform, what should the u.s. do right now? >> well, i know that president obama is working really hard on
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that. my perception is that mexico, our people are contributing to the prosperity of this great nation during almost a century. there is a very important point that i want to raise. if you analyze, for instance, the research from princeton university, the rate of immigration of the united states coming from mexico is almost reaching zero and probably negative in the last year. why? because there are a lot of new conditions. one is the improvement of social opportunities for young people, schools, and jobs opportunities we have created last year more than 800,000 new jobs in mexico. we grew at 5.4%. so the net -- the rate of immigration to u.s. from mexico people is almost zero right now. but that implies that we are
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doing -- or pardon that, but it is necessary to establish a new legal framework in order to solve the situation of the people who is living here in the united states. >> you bring up your country's growth. more than two times as fast as the united states growth right now, thanks in part to manufacturing and the new jobs being created there. with the immigration issues that your country faces as well as the drug war that's taking place, the violence that's taking place right now, if those two issues are not to be addressed and to be addressed soon, is there a chance that that growth is at risk down the road? >> well, let me tell you, somebody called this -- how is possible with such image of violence is not only growing, but also achieving very important points in terms of education or health? for instance, let me tell you that we are almost reaching
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universal health coverage in mexico. so any single mexican will have a doctor, will have medicines, will have treatment, hospitals. i have built more than 1,000 new hospitals in mexico and a little bit more than four years. so we are growing and achieving very important results for mexican people. >> but when people in the united states look at the headlines, they see the deaths, they see the 40,000 deaths that have taken place since 2006 and they wonder how did this stop? what do you think needs to be done to put an end to the violence? >> i already mentioned that it is important to reduce the flow of money going into the hands of the criminals. but the strategy has three parts. one is take it from the criminals to build new law enforcement institutions and to rebuild social fabric in mexico. we are working really hard on these three pieces and as well,
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we persevere in that goal. to solve the problem is not a short-term solution, but there will be a solution and we are working on that. thank you, mr. president. we appreciate it. felipe calderon, president of mexico. coming up next, small businesses are creating fewer jobs. is president obama's jobs bill the answer? we'll ask radio host and small businessman dave ramsey right here on "the early show." [ rob ] hi, i'm rob jones, and i'm a professional race car driver. as a former fighter pilot, i like the fact that quicken loans offers va loans. i worked with a real person while doing everything online. it was the best of both worlds. their rates and fees were low, and their crew kept me updated through every step of the process. quicken loans is a lot like me -- we're both engineered to amaze.
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[ woman ] we didn't know where to go next with eric's adhd. his stimulant medicine was helping, but some symptoms were still in his way. so the doctor kept eric on his current medicine and added nonstimulant intuniv to his treatment plan. [ male announcer ] for some children like eric, adding once-daily nonstimulant intuniv to their stimulant has been shown to provide additional adhd symptom improvement. don't take if allergic to intuniv, its ingredients, or taking other medicines with guanfacine, like tenex. intuniv may cause serious side effects, such as low blood pressure, low heart rate, fainting, and sleepiness. intuniv may affect the ability to drive or use machinery.
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other side effects include nausea, tiredness, trouble sleeping, stomach pain, and dizziness. tell the doctor about your child's medicines and medical conditions, including heart, liver, or kidney problems. [ woman ] adding intuniv helped eric. [ male announcer ] ask the doctor about once-daily nonstimulant intuniv. president obama says his job plan puts a lot of emphasis on small business. more than half of the $447 billion plan is made up of tax incentives that he says can help small business owners. >> and we're talking about the possible impact of this plan with author and small business owner dave ramsey. his new book is called entra leadership. good to have you here. >> it's great to be here. >> you're a small business, you're hiring right now. what is it going to take right now to get your companies doing what you're doing and is that in
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the president's plan? >> i think the president has a great orature. i love the fact that he's identified small business as the answer to the jobs program. that's awesome. all the tinkering, though, as a small business guy, i resist the tax code telling me how to behave. i would rather you leave me alone, set up a stable environment and let me operate. a $4,000 tax credit is not going to help me hire people that i have to pay for the next three years. i'm going to hire people because i see that my business can win. >> so you're a huge fan of the buffett rule, basically? >> one of them. >> can we talk about taxes? what do you think should happen? >> again, it's a small business free enterprise guy. really, 61% of americans work for small businesses. is that that is the answer to moving the economic needle and getting some healing and some recovery going on. i really honestly believe, as a practitioner, that the best thing to do is get out of our
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way. let us do our thing. we are natural animals that exist in this environment if you take the stuff off of it. >> what does that la like? getting out of the way, what needs to be in place and what does government's role need to be in this economy, if anything? >> government's role is not necessarily to engineer things with the tax code. it would be to push the taxes back from the edges and that's not so that millionaires make more money. that's not the point. i know that's the big thing going on. but that's so that as the owner of the business, i have more money, then i can hire people. it's a mathematical equation. >> a simplified tax code? >> a simplified tax code. i've got agencies coming at me from left and right and i only have 300 people hired. >> that is something, when you're on the smaller side, any kind of regulation is going to hit you harder than if you're on the bigger side because you have to allocate more capital to being able to code with that regulation. small business is not hiring this go around like small business has hired previously
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coming out of recovery. do you think there's anything behind that other than what we've discussed already? do you think there's something about the type of business that small business is in that's keeping hiring so weak right now? >> no. it's about hope. by speaking hope into the nation and by setting up an environment where people believe again, then i go hire. it's not about giving me $4,000. >> really jobs are an enormous concern. you call the hiring process relational and not transactional. what does that mean? >> companies lose their soul when they treat their team members as units of production and not human beings. these people have children, they have families, they've got a grandmother that has cancer. these people work on my team. they're my family. when you forget that in america, in business, you mess up your whole company culture. >> dave ramsey, etreleadership.
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why did you buy my husband a falcon? thanks for the falcon. i didn't buy anyone a falcon. sure, you did. you saved us a lot of money on auto insurance. i used that money to buy a falcon. ergo, you bought me a falcon. i should've got a falcon. most people who switch to state farm save on average about $480. what they do with it, well, that's their business. oh, that explains a lot, actually. [ chuckles ] [ male announcer ] another reason people switch to state farm. aw, i could've gotten a falcon. [ male announcer ] get to a better state. [ falcon screeches ]
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welcome back to "the early show." i'm rebecca jarvis with jeff glor. chris and erica are off this morning. friday is the first day of fall. you can feel it out there already. the summer flew by, but when you go outside, you can feel the coolness, the crispness. >> it's crisp, it's football season, it's good. >> it's also allergy season and they're making people miserable. i am one of those people. >> so we're being told, this is maybe the worst allergy season in years, thanks to all the rain
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especially in the northeast. where are you most likely to be affected? we're going to show you a list this morning of the hardest places to live if you have allergies and dr. jennifer ashton is back here. she's going to look at ways to make the allergy season a little better. >> i wonder if new york city is any of them. growing up in indianapolis, i never had an issue and then i move here and -- >> it's just the traffic and the smell. >> it's the usual. it's the way things are here. first, we'll head to betty at the news desk. >> i feel like new york city has to be on the list. i've been feeling it. republicans are shooting down president obama's deficit reduction proposal. the president wants to cut $3.6 trillion in the deficit over ten years, half of that coming from tax increases on the wealthiest americans. social security would not be touched. but there would be cuts in medicare and medicaid. earlier, a former top economic adviser to the president told rebecca that to control the
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deficit, there needs to be cuts and an increase in revenue. >> very high income people's tax rate is the lowest it's been in year. i think a balanced approach is better than a one-sided approach. >> but the former director of the congressional budget office says it's not just taxes where the president missed the boat. it's the broken entitlement programs like social security and medicare. >> we need a social safety net that is durable for the future. we can't afford the red ink that those programs are generating. and the president took a pass on fixing them in any substantial way. >> the president is threatening to veto any plan sent to him that cuts medicare and medicine kay cade and does not raise taxes on wealthy merps. media mogul rupert murdoch may be close to paying millions of dollars to the family of a phone hacking victim. the case sparked a firestorm and anger in britain and led to arrests. charlie is in london with the latest on this.
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good morning, charlie. >> reporter: good morning to you, betty. murdoch's office confirmed to us negotiations are under way. they won't talk numbers, but it's up to $5 million, including more than $1 million donated to charity. the case of millie was the tipping point in the moisture do many dock empire's tapping scandal. eavesdropping on celebrities was one thing, but then reports emerged that a reporter hacked into the voice mail of a 13-year-old school girl. messages were deleted to make room for more. that gave her family false hope she was still alive. in fact, she had already been murdered. the british public was horrified and angry. so were politicians who were soon baying for blood. rupert murdoch and his son, james, were summoned to parliament and made to squirm. the shocking revelations led to
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the closure of the "news of the world" and the resignation of rebekah brooks and others. murdoch personally apologized to millie's family when he met them in july. >> i was appalled to find out what had happened. >> if the $5 million figure is accurate, the cash settlement to the familiar and their chosen charity will dwarf previous payouts to hacking victims. it's understood the $1 million plus donation to charity will come out of murdoch's own pocket. rupert murdoch's personal fortune is estimated at more than $7 billion. the murdoch attorney said no amount of money is going to change what
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as we told you earlier, the don't ask, don't tell policy for gays in the military expired at midnight. that means 13,000 people forced to leave the military under the old rules are now free to reenlist. >> however, one of them, former air force major mike almy is choosing a different route. he has chosen to sue to be reinstated. >> it's good to have you here. your thoughts, the fist day? >> it's a little bittersweet, i
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must say. it's a tremendous step forward towards equality for all gay and lesbian americans, it's obviously long overdue. it's something that most of the rest of our allies have long since changed their policies. it came a few years too late for me as well as the 13,000 other americans and tens of thousands of americans before 1993 when this became a law. >> you served our country for 13 years. >> 13 years, correct. >> now as we mentioned, you're suing to be reinstated. you're not just re-enlisting. why? >> for poem like myself who still want to get back into the military, they have to be physically qualified as well as the military still has to have a need for them. retention is at an all-time high right now as a result of the economy. more people are staying in the military which translates to opportunities for people like myself who want to get in. we filed this lawsuit last year, last december before repeal was finally enacted.
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so at the time, we weren't sure what was going to happen in the lame duck session of congress last season. >> what do you think the transition is going to be like? >> for me personally or all a whole? >> for the military as a whole. a nonevent or a big one? >> there's two answers for that. for lgbt americans, this is a historic milestone. now gays and lesbians can serve honestly and openly in the military with full integrity and have this 50 pound weight i have theed off their back, the constant fear that they could be fire any day if someone misreads an e-mail. that fear is now gone. for straight americans, for straights who are in the military, i think it's going to be a nonevent, which is a good thing, which highlights that gays and lesbians are already serving there. in many cases, they're open and it's had no detrimental effect to the mission. if anything, it's enhanced the mission. >> this repeal has just
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happened. there are others says more needs to be done. >> yes. >> what do you think needs to we done? >> this is a watershed moment. we now have marriage equality in several states, new york, massachusetts, washington, d.c., and yet as of today, you can have service members legally married in their state of residence and have no benefit, no recognition from the military, things such as health care insurance. if a military member was to go overseas, they couldn't take their spouse with them. >> appreciate your time this morning. >> thank you. >> thank you for your time. thanks for having me. up next here, allergies. we're being told it may be the worst season ever. >> lucky us. >> jen ashton joins us with tips on how you can get through it. you're watching he ises. [ male announcer ] this is the network. a network of possibilities.
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excuse me? my grandfather was born in this village. [ cellphone translating ] [ male announcer ] in here, everyone speaks the same language. ♪ in here, forklifts drive themselves. ♪ look at the map. okay. [ male announcer ] in here, friends leave you messages written in the air. that's it right there. [ male announcer ] it's the at&t network. and what's possible in here is almost impossible to say. but your cloud of depression is still with you. maybe it's time to ask your doctor about adding seroquel xr to your antidepressant to treat your depression. seroquel xr is a once-daily, extended-release tablet, which means medication is released around the clock. for many, seroquel xr, when added to an antidepressant, was proven more effective than an antidepressant alone at helping people feel less depressed. call your doctor if you have unusual changes in mood, behavior, or thoughts of suicide.
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antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. elderly dementia patients taking seroquel xr have an increased risk of death. call your doctor if you have fever, stiff muscles, and confusion, as these may be signs of a life-threatening reaction or if you have uncontrollable muscle movements, as these could become permanent. high blood sugar has been reported with seroquel xr and medicines like it and in extreme cases can lead to coma or death. your doctor should check for cataracts. other risks include increased cholesterol and weight gain as well as seizures, dizziness on standing, drowsiness, impaired judgment, trouble swallowing, and decreases in white blood cells, which can be fatal. use caution before driving or operating machinery. isn't it time to put more distance between you and your depression? talk to your doctor about seroquel xr. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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in this morning's health watch, fall allergies, a new list of america's hundred fall allergy capitals is out this morning. >> here it is. number one is knoxville, tennessee. dayton, ohio, is second, followed by mckellen, texas, jackson, mississippi, and oklahoma city. what did these nice cities ever do to get on a list like that? medical correspondent dr. jennifer ashton is here with more. >> fall starts on friday and allergyists are predicting it's going to be one of the harsh heest allergy seasons on the books. the swollen eyes, itchy noses i know what you're going through might be worse than ever. if you live in one of those cities we just showed you, then you already know exactly what we're talking about. instead of enjoying the last days of summer outdoors, peter spent them under the covers. >> i just felt like there was an
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itch up my nose all day long, wouldn't go away, blowing my nose and sneezing, didn't really offer any release. >> his allergies got so bad, he finally took his runny nose to an allergy doctor to get help. peter found out he's allergic to pollen. this fall, allergy experts say the levels of pollen in the air will reach epic proportions, peaking in mid-september. sending people to allergyists like dr. cliff bassette. >> how are you feeling today? >> the normal, itchy throat, watery eyes. >> reporter: it's not just one thing making this season especially bad, it's several, from a rainey summer to spshlg hot day. it adds up to a lot o weeds. >> increase in temperature change is causing plants to produce more pollen and the
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pollen itself is more powerful. and we think it will be lasting another two or three weeks longer this fall. >> and that onslaught of sneezing and itching sendsing folks into dr. bassette's office, that's not going to end any time soon, which is not much consolation for peter burlinghoff who can't get back those days he already lost. >> i didn't really want to be around anybody or do anything. >> it can be very, very frustrating and ruin your day. besides not taking extended walks through the forest, what can people do >> when you're talking about any type of allergy, you're talking about minimizing your exposure or your contact with what you're allergic to. basic ways you can do that, avoid the outdoors between the times of 5:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. that's usually when the pollen counts are the highest. shower and wash your hair at night because there will be
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particulate matter of this pollen on your hair. you don't want to put it on your pillow and sleep with the enemy. use a mild soap and gently rinse off your eyelids. lastly, protect your eyes the.sunglasses are an easy thing to do to protect that pollen from getting into your eyes. >> what about medication and getting shots versus taking pills? >> rebecca, most people will misuse medications as a therapy. you want to reach for something like abdomen antihistamine over the court like a last resort, preventive medications which are mostly by prescription, very effective. then go to the over-the-counter if you need extra. coming up next, julianna margulies. she's fresh off her emmy and the new season begins this sunday. we'll talk about it on "the early show," up next. [ male announcer ] this is lara.
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and the emmy goes to julianna margulies. >> on sunday, she won an emmy for her role in "the good life." >> and to my spectacular husband, i love being your good wife and i'm so grateful you have no political aspirations. and i just want to say thank you to you and to our sweet boy, kiran, you handle my long hours with such grace and understanding. it means nothing without you. thank you. >> juliana is with us now. and it's so sweet because you're tearing up watching that. >> well, because i haven't seen it. i just flew back last night.
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i have party voice. we were talking above a lot of loud music. >> it was so raw. >> i'm very grateful because they are long hours. a parent always has that guilt and my kid never punishes me for it. he'll see me in the morning after not seeing me all day and my husband is so you can about the hours. you can't do it alone. >> the show has to be a dream come true for you. >> it's a dream come true, it really is. i mean, i love playing this character. i love the situation she's put in and is how she deals with her life and i love the writing. and it's rare. it's a rare, beautiful thing to have. >> so we should talk about this a little bit. because there's clearly been a bit of timult on the show so far. >> drama. >> yes. >> your husband slept with your best friend. now you're doing some other things. let's take some other things. let's take a look.
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>> i'd say things have been pretty easy for you up in many until now. >> really? how is that? >> court. these people don't really know how you think. >> but you do? >> i hate to tell you this, but we're going to be -- >> good luck with that. >> icy. >> well, yeah. i think now what gets interested in this season is that i go up against his office constantly. so -- and he's really trying to run a clean office this time. he feels like he's been given a second chance and alicia is sort of -- not that she's going to the dark side, but she's going to win a case any way she can, so the tables are turned a little bit. yeah. >> it's tough. so 16 years since you won your other emmy for er. >> thank you very much. >> that's quite a while. clearly, you've had some other
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roles. is this the one you were always looking for, good wife? >> you know, you always looking for something that's interesting and that's challenging. and television celebrates women in that way. with film, it's a little different in terms of the options that people are given, actresses are given. and the few times i've done film, i've had a really good time in those characters, but this is a character that i find the most challenging and most fun to play because she's so far away from who i am personally. >> she is. >> she is. i wish i could be a little bit more like her. she's incredibly -- she's incredibly articulate and thinks before she speaks and she has great answers, you know? she's a lawyer. >> scripted tv, at least. >> she does have this relationship with her children, though, and it's one that you alluded to at the emmys. sara michelle geller actually contacted you, talked about this in an interview saying, how do you balance work and motherhood
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and it's something you do on the show and it's also something that you do in real life. what did you tell sara michelle geller when she asked you, how do you do it? >> she was very sweet because i think her anxiety about being a lead in a network show where you're doing 23 episodes a year and being a new mom, she's a must mom, was daunting. and i said, look, i'm not going to kid you, it's a lot of work, but it's doable. you just have to balance it out. and, you know, i said but be prepared. you have to be an almostan. you have to stay in great shape, eat well, be there all the time for your kid on your moments of leisure. >> and realize that you can't always control everything. >> you have to let go of control, which is hard. >> that is, especially on their first day of school and you can't dress them. but yes. >> you let go. >> you're not going to cry again. >> no, honestly, and kiera cedric said this to me my first day on work on this show.
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she e-mailed me and said i know you're panicking. kiran was only 14 months at the time. my daughter would never have the relationship she has with her father if i had been around all the time. and it does, it makes the father and child bond. dinner's ready.
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today, patricia is always outspoken. >> are you insecure about anything? >> hair is falling out in certain places and growing in other places that it shouldn't be. so you're looking at a pumpkin patch, but i can only spot one, maybe two hiding there. should be full of pumpkins right now, but it's not. >> is it almost halloween, are
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you serious? >> it is almost halloween and there is a pumpkin shortage because of the rain we've been getting, hurricane irene, tropical storm lee. the pumpkins, underground. >> you think the rain would help, but it hasn't. it's a huge opportunity for pumpkin grow hers across the country. we'll find out if there might be difficulty getting pumpkins this year. also ahead, we have some news. if you like ketchup, no shortage of these. heinz has been trying to improve on those foil frustrating packets for a long time. they finally say they have the solution. the squeeze and dip, dip & squeeze. >> notice a dance move. >> it's coming out. we're going to hear what customers are saying and we'll take a dip ourselves. >> sounds like fun. also 16-year-old golf pro lexi thompson made history this
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weekend becoming the youngest player ever to win an lpga championship. she thinks she could have won calm years ago. she's going to talk about life on tour and her dad caddying by her side. >> one a couple hundred thousand dollars. >> she might need that for the pumpkin headlines these day. >> no pumpkins? you're kidding me. something must be worked out. good morning, everyone. there is fresh violence in yemen this morning. at least nine people have been killed as government forces crackdown on government protesters and that brings the death toll to at least 60 in three straight days of fighting. protesters are trying to force president assad from power. new video may help in the investigation of what caused
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friday's airplane crash in reno. >> shocking newly obtained amateur video of friday's airplane crash in reno captures the horror and carnage of that around. and it happened yards away from bob kraft and his son, steven. >> it hit like a bomb. like a freight train. the sound and the furry, and it was over so fast. but it was an explosion more than an impact. >> he's been in combat for the last few years in afghanistan and i haven't had an opportunity to come. i really thought when the airplane came over the top that we were not going to make it. >> the one thing i remember seeing is the nose, the front of the aircraft coming straight down right at us. >> did you think it was going to hit you? >> there was no doubt in my mind that it was going to hit us and we were going to die. >> steven captured these pictures of the mayhem. >> people were taking belts off, people were trying to cover the wounds. it was incredible.
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>> people had begun applying tourniquets. people were coming up going, what can i do? what can i do? the biggest thing was i need your help. >> emergency news julie boringan was working in a nearby first aid booth. >> most of the people were critically injured and in so much shocked that they were silent. the hardest part was going back and looking at some of those injuries knowing that some of those people weren't going to live no matter what we did. >> reporter: dozens of people joined her. >> everybody dropped everything to save people. that's what america is about. that's what we did. >> that means a lot. >> it does to me. >> karen brown, cbs news, reno, nevada. hollywood is mourning delores hope's life. she's the widow of bob hope.
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bob and dolores were at the dedication of her star right next to his. mrs. hope gave up a career as a singer when they married and moved to hollywood. they were married for almost 70 years. she died yesterday in los angeles. delores hope was 102 years old. so i've got a question for you. you go to mcdonald's, do you
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ever take a couple ketchup packets with you, a little extra for later? >> rnd the seats. >> they could be a collector's item coming up. there is a big change for america's top ketchup. heinz is giving up its ketchup packets, or rather giving them a makeover. and it's good news for consumers and bad news for dry-cleaners. >> it's an american as apple pie, burgers and fries. since 1968, the way most hungry consumers dress their fast food is with several single sloppy serve packets. >> i hate when it explodes on you. >> now, more than 40 years later, heinz has unveiled a new ketchup packet called the dip & squeeze. and this redesigned ketchup container does everything its name implies. from one end, the lid can be peeled out for dipping and on
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the other end, it can be opened like a bottle for squeezing. it holds three times more than the current catchup. chick-filet began carrying them earlier this year. customers at this location in new jersey are any indication, the new pockets are a big hit. >> they're really easy to open. >> some of the time. go. open. >> just like that. in less than two seconds. >> yes. >> i like it because it's in a really cool shape and if you have chicken nuggets or something, you can just peel it back and dip it. >> stewart leslie is the president of foresight incorporated. his packaging firm worked with heinz to develop a better packet. >> the intention with this design is create a shape that says to the consumer, this is enough ketchup for you to put on your burgers and your fries. >> michelle miller, cbs news,
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new york. >> you actually just missed. jeff got ketchup all over. >> these are not easy to open here. i'm sorry, but -- the squeeze side of it is the complime complicated said. i guess you dip it like -- >> that's the squeeze and then you have the alternative dip. here you can dip. this would be the way of not getting it all over your hands. >> i wonder where he gets it from now. sorry. >> it's okay. jeff will learn. >> what about the other -- i need a napkin. >> do you want to compare? >> we could compare. >> you comparing is kind of like ridiculous because we know how good you are with this stuff in the first place. >> in the meantime, while we clean -- here we go. thank you. in the meantime, we're going to talk about another issue. a scary problem that may be threatening halloween this year. it turns out there's a pumpkin shortage. >> the recent weather has washed away almost all the crop in the
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northeast. karen has more. >> reporter: is that right. i'm here in the pumpkin field and because of the severe weather, there's a complete shortage of pumpkins. normally this time last year, i would ve have been surrounded by a sea of orange. but because of the severe weather, this place has lost 83% of their pumpkin crop. big or small, there's nothing that says fall quite like a pumpkin. whether you eat them or carve them, pumpkins are autumn's finest bounty. but throughout the northeast, pumpkin patches are in peril. many wiped away in a one-two wallop at the hands of tropical storms lee and irene, decimating crops from new york to new england. >> am i holding a direct casualty of storms lee and irene? >> you are holding a casualty. you can see the disease. it's already rotting. it rots from the inside out. >> karen scott's family has been growing pumpkins on their farm
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for more than 75 years. last year at this time, what did you see compared to now? >> oh, you saw the whole field was orange. you could barely walk from here to the end of the row without tripping over a pumpkin. >> she says this is one of the worst harvester she's seen in a long time. only two of her 12 acres of pumpkins survived the torrential rainfall. >> normally we would have about 42 inches from january to the end of the year. we have had that 42 inches already and we have 3 1/2 months to go. >> leaving farmers in short supply just in time for the peak holiday season. >> if someone were to buy a pumpkin now, it is very likely that that pumpkin is not going to last till halloween. >> while farmers in the northeast cope, other big pumpkin producing states like illinois, indiana, california and ohio are taking advantage of the shortages, forcing farmers like karen to import more pumpkins. >> this year, i did not plan to
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buy any. >> how many pumpkins will be be outsourcing? >> probably about $15,000 or more. >> in sh season of trick or treating, it's a cool trick by mother nature. >> one cruel summer, indeed. and the scott family tells me they anticipated harvesting 50 tons of pumpkins this year. they'll be lucky if they get ten tons. what does that mean for you and i, the customer? last year at this time they were selling pumpkins for 49 cents a pound. now it's up to 69 cents a pound. who knows where that will be capped. >> thank you. if you're one of the 80 million americans with a smartphone, we're taking a turn here from pumpkins to smartphones. >> the desk has been cleaned, fully. >> it's another scary thing. you should know they can be attacked by the same viruses that can plague your computer. >> this is becoming a bigger issue. here with much needed advice this morning is our "the early show" tech expert, katie
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linendal. the problem with viruses on smartphones, is it worse on phones than computers? i should say laptops. >> here is the deal. i always tell people, people think of the computer as the most powerful device. i like to say it's the smartphone now. it's on us 24/7. the amount of data we have on here are gold mines. so yes, we need to be a lot more careful. >> but right now, the problem is not awful, it's just creeping up. >> it's growing and it's growing exponentially. what should we be doing to protect ourselves? >> a few tip owes what to look for and what's out there. we always talk about apps. we love our apps. angry birds, bejeweled, great. make sure you're downloading from a trusted source. there were some apps that were malicious. one was a fake antivirus that got into the apple's i store.
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you download these and they pull them quickly, but sometimes for many it's too late. you have to say, is this a reputable company? what are the reviews? download only from a trusted source. >> we always hear about pcs obviously being more susceptible to viruses. same case, and resides versus iphones? >> bad news for android users. way more susceptible. the reason for that is it's an open first program. if you are an android users, the rate -- and i want to give you the statistic. according to lookout, a mobile security firm, three out of ten android owners are likely to encounter a web base virus every year. so the android user, what do you do? you download lookout. it's a free mobile security app. for $30 a year, you get premium services. if you lose your phone, you can
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wipe your data remotely. it will protect you from spy wear and any malwear that comes into your device. >> thank you. >> thanks. the hit drama ncis returns tonight with one of its most popular characters. >> early show contributor caught up with pauley perrette. >> this area brings back memories. i feel like you posed everywhere. >> i have been in some fabulous outfit in every single place in this hotel. >> these timeless photos feature ncis star pauleyp perrette. she married william paley in 1997. the powerful couple lived here in st. regis hotel. >> how did you get into character for this?
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>> i went back and did research on her and she just had an interesting figure. especially, it was a different time then and just the way she carried herself and every little thing that she did can become, like, instantly a trend from, like, a bag or the way she stood or the way she walked, anything. that's how you get all those iconic photographs of her. >> tell me a little bit about your time, kind of down and dirty in new york when you were trying to make yao way. >> oh, it was very different. i was in new york forever. i was a bartender, eeking by as a bartender with roller skates, nothing as fancy as this. >> when she's not recreating the fashion of yesteryear, she
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portrays abby sciuto on ncis. >> it's an iconic character that i have the honor to play. i'm the luckiest girl in the way to play abby sciuto. >> a devoted following has made her one of prime time's local characters. she's been inspiring young girls to pursue a degree in science. >> there are young girls who started watching the show when they were, like, ten. now they're going to college and they're getting degrees in math and science. i hear it all the time. it's amazing. >> are you a science and math geek? >> actually, i'm a math freak and i love science. i'm fascinated by it. >> with the smily face? >> always looking for new ways to engage her expanding audience, pauley has become one of twitter's most active stars.
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while she's posts the occasional picture of her rescue dog, she has causes. >> she started a twitter campaign for this women eeps shelter and it worked. we saved the shelter. and then i got addicted. you start thinking in twitter, oh, i'll tweet that. >> based on the level -- >> paulie's twitter feed should see a rather large spike tonight when ncis makes its season premier after its summer hiatus. >> we can't wait for everybody to actually see what us crazy kids have been up to. >> i heart abby hash tag ncis. >> yeah. >> and don't forget, watch the season premier of ncis with pauley perrette tonight at 8:00 central on cbs. coming up, lexi thompson,
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the youngest women ever on the women's tour. you're 16 years old and you just state farm. this is jessica. hey, jessica, jerry neumann with a policy question. jerry, how are you doing? fine, i just got a little fender bender. oh, jerry, i'm so sorry. i would love to help but remember, you dropped us last month. yeah, you know it's funny. it only took 15 minutes to sign up for that new auto insurance company but it's taken a lot longer to hear back. is your car up a pole again? [ crying ] i miss you, jessica! jerry, are you crying? no, i just, i bit my tongue. [ male announcer ] get to a better state. state farm. we're on the move. ♪ and we don't want anything, ever, to slow us down.
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the biggest story in women's golf right now is a 16-year-old champ lexi thompson made history on sunday winning the navistar classic by five strokes. >> lexi turned pro last year. she is the youngest ever to win on the lpga tour. to make it even more special, her dad was her caddie. lexi thompson joins us this morning. congrats. >> thank you. >> you have the trophy right here. >> yep. >> did they engrave your name on that or what? >> nope. nobody's name is on it. >> it looks nice. >> thank you. >> $195,000, where does that go? >> well, i actually donated $20,000 to wounded warriors. and then the rest is just in a bank account, i guess.
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>> is your dad going to get any kickback for being your caddie? >> i'll treat him well. >> is that weird, having your dad be a part of these huge moments? does it freak you out at all or is it calming? >> it's really calming. he knows my game so well, so it's just really relaxing to have him on the bag. >> did you have a road map to say, listen, this is what i want to win by or was this just an enormous surprise? >> well, i was actually playing pretty well lately. i knew it was coming up. i was just being patient. i was really looking forward to this moment. >> it sounds like you're a bit of a perfectionist. you wish you had done it, what, two years before? >> well, last year i got pretty close. but i really love this tournament and i was really happy that it happened here. >> you've accomplished so much at such a young age. you qualified for the women's u.s. open at 12 years old. we've seen a lot of other sports
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prodigies, michelle wi is one of your sports in golf. she came out and said she wanted to compete on the men's tour. she clearly has struggled quite a bit. when you look at all that, how do you figure out the best way to proceed and what the timetable is? >> i'm just doing -- you know, i'm just going along with everything, stay it one tournament at a time. i'm not going to the men's tournament. michelle is an amazing player. i'm looking forward to watching. >> how old were you when you initially got into golf? >> i started when i was 5 years old. >> did you imagine at 5, was this the goal at 5 years old or even after that point to be a star in this game? >> i would say probably when i was around 8, 7 or 8 i wanted to be big time in this sport. but when i was 5, i wasn't very good. it was just fun. >> first club you picked up? >> yeah, when i was 5. >> no, what was the club? >> oh, i don't know. it must have been plastic for all i know. >> lexi thompson, great to have you with us today. thanks for bringing along the
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trophy. pretty cool. >> thank you. >> lexi thompson, ladies and gentlemen. watch out for her. we are going to wrap for now. have a great day, everybody. we'll see you back here tomorrow morning. -dad, why are you getting that? -that's my cereal.
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is there a prize in there? oh, there's a prize, all right. is it a robot? no. is it a jet plane? nope. is it a dinosaur? [ laughs ] [ male announcer ] inside every box of heart healthy cheerios are those great tasting little o's made from carefully selected oats that can help lower cholesterol. stickers? uh-uh. a superhero? ♪ kinda. [ male announcer ] and we think that's the best prize of all. ♪
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[ zapping ] there goes dwayne's car. oh, man. there goes dwayne's house. whoa! whoa! and there goes dwayne. man, that thing does not like dwayne. [ male announcer ] state farm's got you covered. nice landing. it was. [ male announcer ] get to a better state. nice landing. it was. the best place for a vacation is mississippi. you mean louisiana. florida's where folk's want to be. alabama's got you all beat. no matter which state you choose, everyone agrees the gulf is vacation at it's best. mississippi outdoors, louisiana seafood, florida beaches, alabama shoreline. so come on down to mississippi, louisiana, florida, alabama. the gulf is the world's goodtime headquarters. and we are 100% open for business.

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